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The Secret Communication Network of the Mongol Empire — Fexingo History

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Les mer The Secret Communication Network of the Mongol Empire — Fexingo History

The Mongol Empire, the largest contiguous land empire in history, depended on a vast network of communication that spanned from the Pacific to the Danube. This show, hosted by Lucas and Luna, unravels the secrets of the Yam system — a relay of horse-mounted messengers and waystations that allowed Genghis Khan and his successors to rule an empire of 24 million square kilometers. We trace the routes of the Mongol postal roads, examining how they linked Karakorum to Beijing, Samarkand, and beyond. Delve into the role of the ortoo stations, where fresh horses and supplies were kept ready, and the paiza tablets that granted travelers safe passage. Explore how this system enabled rapid military intelligence, facilitated trade along the Silk Road, and even influenced later postal systems in Russia and the Middle East. We discuss the debates among historians about the system's efficiency, its impact on the spread of the Black Death, and its legacy in modern communications. Join Lucas and Luna as they ride the steppe into the heart of Mongol imperial power and discover how a network of riders forged the first global information age. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #YamSystem #SilkRoad #Karakorum #MongolPostalSystem #SteppeHistory #MedievalAsia #KublaiKhan #HistoryOfCommunication #MongolCavalry #EmpireLogistics #WorldHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast #MedievalHistory #NomadicEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo

Alle episoder

157 Episoder

episode The Yam's Baggage Train: Mongol Postal Supply Logistics cover

The Yam's Baggage Train: Mongol Postal Supply Logistics

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the unseen backbone of the Mongol Empire's Yam postal system: the supply logistics that kept thousands of riders and horses fed, equipped, and moving across the steppe. Drawing on the Yuan shi, Marco Polo's accounts, and the Jami' al-tawarikh, they reveal how the empire managed grain depots, fodder allocations, and livestock rotation at relay stations from Karakorum to Khanbalik. The discussion zeroes in on the practical challenges of provisioning a network that stretched 25,000 miles, including the role of local communities in tax obligations known as alban, the use of camels in arid zones, and the specialized yamchi handlers who maintained remounts. Lucas connects these supply chains to broader Mongol statecraft—how Ögedei Khan's edicts standardized station resources, and how Khubilai Khan's reforms introduced civilian contractors. The episode also touches on the lesser-known 'baggage yam' (aghtachi) that moved heavy goods, and the ecological impact of grazing demands on the steppe. #MongolEmpire #YamPostalSystem #SupplyLogistics #YuanShi #MarcoPolo #JamiAltawarikh #OgedeiKhan #KhubilaiKhan #yamchi #aghtachi #SteppeLogistics #MongolHorses #CentralAsiaHistory #Karakorum #Khanbalik #FexingoHistory #History #MongolPostalRelay Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14. juli 2026 - 7 min
episode The Yam's Last Ride: How the Mongol Postal System Outlived the Empire cover

The Yam's Last Ride: How the Mongol Postal System Outlived the Empire

The Mongol postal system, the Yam, is famous as the empire's circulatory system, but what happened to it after the Mongol Empire fragmented? In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the Yam's surprising afterlife across Asia. They explore how the Timurids revived the Yam in Central Asia, with Tamerlane using it to project power from Samarkand. In China, the Ming dynasty under the Hongwu Emperor adopted the Yuan postal network wholesale, renaming it the Yizhan and extending it to the southern coast. The Mughals in India, founded by Babur who claimed descent from both Timur and Genghis Khan, established their own version, the Dak Chowki, which later evolved into the British Raj's postal system. Lucas discusses the Russian Empire's adaptation, the Yamskaya povinnost, which endured until the 19th century and gave its name to hundreds of Russian towns. The episode also touches on the Safavids and the Ottomans, who hybridized the Yam with their own traditions. By the end, the listener understands that the Yam didn't truly collapse—it dispersed, mutated, and merged into the postal DNA of half the world. #MongolPostalSystem #Yam #TimuridEmpire #MingDynasty #MughalEmpire #RussianEmpire #Tamerlane #Hongwu #Babur #YamskayaPovinnost #DakChowki #SilkRoad #PostalHistory #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #EmpireLegacy #GlobalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går - 7 min
episode The Yam's Medical Post: How Mongol Riders Carried Plague cover

The Yam's Medical Post: How Mongol Riders Carried Plague

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna examine a darker chapter of the Mongol Yam network: its unwitting role in the spread of the Black Death. Drawing on the work of historian Philip Ziegler and the Jami' al-tawarikh, they trace how the Yam's swift relay of riders and goods along the Silk Road may have carried Yersinia pestis from the Tian Shan mountains to Crimea. They explore the siege of Caffa in 1346, where Genoese traders fled plague-ridden ships to Venice and Genoa, and examine competing theories about the Yam's part in the pandemic. Did Mongol army catapults deliberately launch plague corpses into Caffa? Or was the Yam simply the efficient conduit for rats and fleas? Lucas and Luna weigh the evidence, from Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron to the Yuan shi, and consider how the very infrastructure that held the empire together also helped unravel much of Eurasia. #BlackDeath #MongolEmpire #Yam #Plague #Caffa #SilkRoad #YersiniaPestis #Genoese #JamiAlTawarikh #RashidAlDin #YuanShi #Khanbalik #Crimea #Boccaccio #Decameron #MedievalHistory #Epidemiology #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går - 7 min
episode The Yam's Female Riders: Women in Mongol Postal Service cover

The Yam's Female Riders: Women in Mongol Postal Service

When we think of the Mongol Yam, we picture male riders. But women served too—as station managers, relay riders, and even spies. This episode follows Khutulun, the wrestling princess who commanded Yam stations in Central Asia; the khatuns who ran postal networks in the Ilkhanate; and the Chinese female couriers documented in the Yuan shi. We explore how Mongol customs of women's mobility and authority shaped the Yam, the tasks women handled, and why their role faded as the empire fragmented. Drawing on Rashid al-Din's Jami' al-tawarikh, Marco Polo's travelogue, and the Secret History of the Mongols, we uncover a forgotten dimension of the world's first global postal system. #Yam #MongolEmpire #WomenInHistory #Khutulun #Khatun #YuanShi #RashidAlDin #JamiAlTawarikh #SecretHistoryOfTheMongols #MarcoPolo #Ilkhanate #Khanbalik #CentralAsia #Steppe #Horseback #PostalHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12. juli 2026 - 5 min
episode The Yam's Animal Relay: Horses, Camels, and Yaks in Mongol Posts cover

The Yam's Animal Relay: Horses, Camels, and Yaks in Mongol Posts

Episode 153 of Fexingo History's Mongol series dives into the unsung workhorses of the Yam — the Mongol postal relay system. While previous episodes covered riders, stations, and encryption, this episode focuses on the animals themselves: the hardy Mongol horses that could travel 80 miles a day, the Bactrian camels that carried supplies across deserts, the yaks that hauled post over Himalayan passes, and the sheep and goats that fed yamchi at remote stations. Lucas and Luna discuss how the Mongols bred and rotated mounts, the specialized care for each animal, and how the choice of beast shaped the speed and reach of messages across the empire. Based on sources like the Yuan shi, Jami' al-tawarikh, and Marco Polo's accounts, this episode reveals the living infrastructure that made the Yam the fastest communication network of the medieval world. #MongolEmpire #Yam #PostalHistory #Horses #Camels #Yaks #YuanDynasty #GenghisKhan #KhubilaiKhan #CentralAsia #Steppe #MarcoPolo #YuanShi #JamiAlTawarikh #SilkRoad #AnimalHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12. juli 2026 - 4 min
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